“…This growing literature includes themes such as women's understanding of their own bodies (Boughton, 2008;Dillaway, 2005aDillaway, , 2006aHarrison and Becker, 2007); encounters between menopausal women and biomedical professionals (Banister, 1999); women's perspectives on hormone therapy (Ballard, 2002;Stephens et al, 2002;Kolip et al, 2009); coping strategies and managing symptoms (Im et al, 2008;Lindh-Åstrand et al, 2007;Kafanelis et al, 2009); menopausal women's views on ageing (Banister, 1999;Dillaway, 2005b;Hvas, 2006); the impact of menopause on social roles (Dillaway, 2006b); and on sexuality (Winterich, 2003;Dillaway, 2005b). Much of this scholarship emerged from a feminist perspective with writers responding to (and usually resisting) the biomedical notion of menopause as a hormone deficiency disease leading to dwindling femininity, loss of womanhood, sexual redundancy, empty nest syndrome and clinical pathologies.…”